The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds

theatre department/robsham theater arts center production

Marigolds_Poster

     November 17 at 7:30 p.m.
     November 18 at 7:30 p.m.
     November 19 at 7:30 p.m.

purchase

     Ticket Prices

     Adults: $15
     Students: $10 (w/valid ID) 
     Seniors: $10
     BC Faculty/Staff: $10 (one ticket per ID)


Creative Team

By Paul Zindel
Directed by Marc Franklin '12
Scenic Design by Nancy McNamee '12
Costume Design by Meghan Crosby '12
Lighting Design by Patrick Brazil '12
Sound Design by Sara Komorowski '14
Stage Management by Bryanna Vacanti '12

Cast

Beatrice - Juliana Forsberg-Lary '12
Ruth - Deirdre McCourt '12
Tillie - Shannon DeBari '13
Nanny - Maggie Kearnan '14
Janice - Sarah Mass '15

 

By Paul Zindel
A Theatre Department Workshop Production
Directed by Marc Franklin '12
November 17-19 at 7:30 p.m.

Frowzy, acid-tongued, supporting herself and her two daughters by taking in a decrepit old boarder, Beatrice Hunsdorfer wreaks a petty vengeance on everybody around her. One daughter, Ruth, is a pretty but highly strung girl subject to convulsions; while the younger daughter, Matilda, plain and almost pathologically shy, has an intuitive gift for science. Encouraged by her teacher, Tillie undertakes a gamma ray experiment with marigolds that wins a prize at her high school—and also brings on the shattering climax of the play. Proud and yet jealous, too filled with her own hurts to accept her daughter's success, Beatrice can only maim when she needs to love and deride when she wants to praise. Tortured, acerbic, slatternly, she is as much a victim of her own nature as of the cruel lot that has been hers. And yet, as Tillie's experiment proves, something beautiful and full of promise can emerge from even the most barren, afflicted soil. This is the timeless lesson of the play and the root of its moving power and truth.

Winner of the 1971 Pulitzer Prize, the Obie Award and the New York Drama Critics Circle Award as Best American Play of the season. One of Off-Broadway's greatest successes, this powerful and moving study of an embittered, vindictive widow and her two young daughters has been hailed as one of the most significant and affecting plays of our time. "Let's start with a single, simple word. Power…I don't know of a better (play) of its genre since The Glass Menagerie…" —NY Post.

"The play itself is one of the lucky blooms; it survives, and is beautiful." —NY Times.

"Off-Broadway has been gifted with a great human drama…" —NY Daily News.